Draghi remains cautious on eurozone recovery

Signs of a strong pick up in business activity in Europe are still not enough to allow the eurozone economy to stand unaided according to the president of the European Central Bank.

Mario Draghi, ECB chief, believes that weak underlying inflation and subdued wage growth make it likely that "substantial" stimulus will still be required to bring consumer price inflation back to the central bank's 2% target.

Draghi speaks, euro briefly drops

Speaking before the European parliament in Brussels on Monday, Draghi said: "For domestic price pressures to strengthen, we still need very accommodative financing conditions.”

He added that these financing conditions were themselves “dependent on a fairly substantial amount of monetary accommodation”.

The euro dropped against all its major rivals on Monday and early Tuesday as the knee-jerk reaction suggested lower rates and monetary stimulus would last longer.

But was there really ever any strong evidence to suggest that the ECB's cautious stance was likely to ease in the coming weeks?

Eurozone recovery

If the data and surveys are examined, it's hard to see why inflation remains so entrenched:

Eurozone GDP is running at a faster pace than the US: 0.5% month-on-month growth in the first quarter; nearly a 2% annualised pace of growth

In Germany, the eurozone's biggest economy, GDP growth is running at an annualised 1.7%

While a Reuters poll suggested a dip back to 56.6 for IHS Markit's composite purchasing managers index, May's index matched April's 56.8 – the further above 50, the faster business activity expands

Manufacturing PMI rose to 57 in May from 56.7 in April; Services PMI dipped back to 56.2 from 56.4, but remained robust

Germany's Ifo business confidence index hit a record 114.6 in May, with sub indexes for both current conditions and future expectations rising above forecasts

Spending subdued

Consumer confidence remains subdued, however. Falling unemployment is not enough to gear up the European consumer as similar stagnation in wage growth as experienced in both the UK and US, saps the will to spend.

Data from the European Commission on Tuesday show that while the business climate and industrial confidence were upbeat, consumer confidence in May was low, just lifting from April’s -3.6 to -3.3.

Deck the malls: Low wage growth is sapping European shoppers' will to spend - Wikimedia Commons

Greece remains a concern

Meanwhile, fallout remains from Europe's last crisis as bailout recipient Greece looks for further debt relief – a deal that would allow its inclusion in the ECB's quantitative easing programme.

Fears are rising that if a deal cannot be reached, Greece may opt out of its next bailout payment, and risk default.

Greek bond yields have started rising in the past few days, with the 2-year yield hitting month highs around 5.5%, while the benchmark 10-year yield broke back through the 6% level.

Andrew Kenningham at Capital Economics says: "With inflation still well below the target, monetary policy tightening remains a long way off in the eurozone."

He adds: "The ECB is still adding to its securities purchased under QE, while it is likely to taper its asset purchases gradually during the first half of next year and to leave its key policy rates unchanged until 2019."

ECB’s June policy meeting

While Draghi’s comments on Monday were taken to be dovish, the ECB is unlikely to retreat from its strategy of nuanced statements to signpost its intentions in the coming months.

In its April statement, the ECB repeated its pledge to keep interest rates “at present or lower levels for an extended period of time, and well past the horizon of the net asset purchases”.

Many still expect the central bank at its June meeting to drop the “or lower” phrasing.

For the next few months it is more likely that US central bank policy will dictate the euro’s direction until eurozone inflation starts to gather pace.

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